Open access status among articles involving Charité authors and among articles with a Charité corresponding author.
Publishers and journals among articles involving Charité authors, by open access status
Open licenses under which articles involving Charité authors were published
Chosen sources include information about corresponding authors and their affiliations. Corresponding authors are of special interest here because they are responsible for paying fees associated with gold and hybrid Open Access (OA) publishing. Such data is used in cost estimates for the Charité. However, any author can self-archive a paper (green open access) and thus the total number of papers with a Charité authorship is significant when measuring the percentage of open access reached by the institution as a whole. While the percentage of OA publishing is a key indicator for the visibility and discoverability of research findings, the quality and costs of open access must also be monitored, hence the selection of analyses presented in this dashboard.
Data collection is time consuming and thus happens annually. Metadata describing articles from Web of Science, EMBASE and from the Charité Medical Library (including our Publication Fund) are combined and deduplicated largely by DOI-matching but also involving manual checks especially where DOIs are missing from the data.
Data for the years 2018 to 2020 form the basis of the latest predictions for future open access costs for the Charité.
However, since open access status changes and in particular green OA is often delayed, Analysis 1 “Open access status among articles involving Charité authors and among articles with a Charité corresponding author” has been extended back until 2016 to show longer term trends and the potential for future growth of OA.
Analysis 2 “Publishers and journals among articles involving Charité authors, by open access status” shows the most recent publisher and journal choices of Charité authors from 2020 and looks at centrally financed OA-costs over the last three years: the blue chart is clickable to show costs by publisher or by year, showing the steep rise in central costs since the launch of the Publication Fund in 2018 and introduction of DEAL with Wiley in 2019 and SpringerNature in 2020. Actual and complete costs for the institution are likely to be much higher than reported here, since data is currently only available for centrally financed articles. Efforts are being made to complete the picture.
Analysis 3 looks at the use of open licenses over the last three years, according to the open access status of an article.
The Unpaywall interface is used to ascertain the open access status of articles via DOI. Green open access is a status which often changes over time due to expiry of publisher embargoes and later author deposits to open access repositories. Definitions for the OA-Status of articles are:
This is included as a status for the sake of completeness but does not fit the definition of open access from the Berlin Declaration, which the Charité is a signatory of. There are two reasons why bronze is not true open access:
Similarly, as shown in Analysis 3, most green open access publishing also happens without a clearly identifiable license but at least free access is granted for the long term.